THE Summer Daily Vol. LXXXIII, No. 9-S Ann Arbor, Michigan-Saturday, May 19, 1973 Ten Cents Twelve Pages McCord: Nixon knew of clemency proposal Harvard prof. named prosecutor BY AP and UP James McCord testified yesterday that at secret meetings during the Watergate trial in January, he received repeated offers of executive clemency from a White House aide, and was told President Nixon knew of the meetings. McCord, convicted of burglarizing Demo- cratic headquarters at the Watergate, told Senate investigators that an offer of executive clemency-which only the presi- dent can grant-was made by John Caul- field, a law enforcement adviser to John Dean. In other Watergate developments yes- terday: * Attorney General-designate E 11 i o t Richardson turned over the prosecution of the Watergate scandal to a- Democrat, Archibald Cox, a former federal official and now a Harvard professor of law. Cox said his investigation would range beyond the Watergate break-in to "all offenses arising out of the ':2 elections, all allega- tions involving the President, White House employes or appointees." * Stuart Symington (D-Mo.) said he had received new CIA documents that make it "even more difficult for me to visualize that the President knew nothing about" efforts to involve the CIA in the coverup of the Watergate scandal. " Four f'rmer White House aides, in- eluding' H. R (Bob) Haldeman and John Ehrlichman, were asked to testify before .a Senate subcommittee on the CIA's role in the Watergate and Pentagon Papers cases. Former White House Counsel John Dean and former National Security Coun- cil aide David Young have also been asked to testify. McCord told, the special Senate Water- gate Committee in its second day of hear- ings that Caulfield promised him financial aid and a job when he got out of jail if he would plead guilty and remain silent during the Watergate trail. "The President's ability to govern is at stake. Another Teapot Dome scandal is possible and the government may fall," McCord said he was told by Caulfield, now a Treasury Department official on leave. "I may have a message to you at our next meeting from the President himself," McCord said he was told by Caulfield on Jan. 12 when the Watergate trial was in its fourth day. McCord was convicted as a conspirator, burglar and wiretapper in the trial. "The executive clemency offer was made two or three times during this meeting," McCord told the special Senate Watergate Committee in its second day of hearings. "I repeated each time that I would not even discuss it, nor discuss pleading guilty." The White House quickly and vigorously denied once again any knowledge by Nixon of cover-up activities, as it had done previously after published reports of See McCORD, Page 5 SEN. SAM ERVIN (D-N.C.), chairman of the Watergate Investigating Committee, confers with, from left, Fred Thompson, chief minority counsel, Sen. Howard Baker (R-Tenn.) and Samuel Dash, chief majority counsel. K RASNY JUBILANT: AlI leged heroin dealers arrested by city police. By DAN BIDDLE Three men suspected of being top-level figures in the city's heroin - dealing oper- ations were arraigned yesterday on charges of heroin possession and carrying concealed weapons following their arrest Thursday. Local police dpprehended the three al- leged drug dealers after a brief downtown car chase late Thursday night. Police Chief Walter Krasny said yester- day that one of the men, Alonzo "Fat Lon- nie" Malone, has been an important but elusive target of drug investigations for some time. THE OTHER two suspects have been identified as Walter "Pud" Harris of Ann Arbor and Ronald Moore, who gave an address, in Compton, Calif., a suburb of Los Angeles. Malone is said to have at least two local addresses. Harris and Malone are allegedly involv- ed in "a pretty tight local network" of drug trafficking, and police say two ear- lier incidents involving possible members of the operation led to the-arrests Thurs- day night. Two detectives were following the sus- pects' car through the city at about 10 p.m. Thursday when the trio sped away and turned down an alley behind the Der- by Bar on Ann St. . THE DETECTIVES radioed for help and the three men surrendered without a fight after their car was boxed in by po- lice vehicles. - But according to police, the suspects managed to unload four guns, a large amount of cash, and a quantity - of sus- -pected heroin during the car chase. Police seized a total of nearly $17,000 in cash, heroin quantities valued at $1,100, and four revolvers in the arrests. KRASNY, who expressed obvious plea- sure at the apprehension of Malone, said "Fat Lonnie" had been robbed of more than $1000 in cash and possessions in Is- land Park Tuesday night. . Several hours later, gunmen robbed and shot an unidentified Monroe man in the same alley where police trapped the three suspects, leaving him with a leg wound and removing $170. Krasny hinted that the gunmen may have been part of Malone's organization. See POLICE, Page 5